Epic of Gilgamesh

The Wanderings of Gilgamesh (Part 2)


Listen Later

In this conclusion of the Epic Gilgamesh has wandered from his home, his wife, his children, his people, has given up his kingdom and power, all that was a comfort and a pleasure, all that meant life to him, because of the death of his brother Enkidu. More than his loss, his inconsolable grief for that lose, it was the realization of his own death that distressed him. He seeks escape. He knows the legend of Ut-napishtim, whose name literally means, “he who lives long.” He seeks him out at the end of the world, through the sacred (and forbidden) passage of the sun, the god who has been his special savior, as the Epic has told us. From Ut-napishtim he hopes to find answers or perhaps the way to avoid dying, just as he had. In the conclusion you are about to hear, he will be told the story of how Ut-napishtim came to his state of undying. He is segregated from man, so he tells, because this generation of men to which Gilgamesh belongs is a new incarnation; he is the sole survivor of an ancient race whom the gods determined to destroy by a world-wide flood.
When this ancient text was first translated in a musty storeroom of the British Museum, to where the tablets of the ancient library had been brought after their discovery in Iraq some twenty-five years earlier, the young scholar, George Smith, became so excited, it is said, that he took off his clothes and began to dance about.
For some the finding reinforced the inauthenticity of the Biblical text, demonstrating that the Jews had expropriated a clearly pagan story for their own, reinforcing the secular notion that historical religions develop, as culture generally does, by the influences and cross-currents of social interaction. What we have here in Genesis is nothing more than an exchange of ideas and stories.
However, for others, the discovery of this text seemed an affirmation of the Bible, coming as it did so closely on the heels of Darwin’s heretical assertion of evolution in defiance of God’s Creation as stated in the book of Genesis. Here was proof, it seemed to many, of the truth of sacred text. Here, also the text of Genesis, is the tale of Noah and the Flood, corroborated by a pagan source, no less.
Today the controversy has subsided to debates of evangelical truth or scientific fact. If a matter of religious conviction, fact must be subserved by belief. If a matter of science, some argue that the Deluge is really psychological; it expresses a vital natural anxiety; it dramatically illustrates the notion of annihilation of self, precisely what Gilgamesh feared about death. Psychologists will interpret the myths of Deluge, as they might dreams of a deluge, as spiritual crisis. But in another approach by science, some archaeologists, in the tradition of Schliemann who claimed to dig up artifacts of the Iliad in ancient rubble, keep looking for an historical event, a real Deluge that happened and is recalled more or less in these ancient texts.
In one version of this science it is proposed that the Deluge occurred about 5600 BCE when the Black Sea was suddenly formed because of a catastrophic flood through a narrow breach between that great basin and the Mediterranean ocean pouring into it. The Black Sea (and its neighbor the Caspian sea) had been large but diminishing pools of fresh water from glacial melt, when the dam of ice between them and the Mediterranean broke at what is today the Dardanelles. According to the researchers reporting their findings in 1997, "Ten cubic miles of water poured through each day, two hundred times what flows over Niagara Falls ... The Bosporus flume roared and surged at full spate for at least three hundred days." The event flooded 60,000 sq. mi. of land as it greatly expanded the Black Sea shoreline to the north and west, and thus could have wiped out hundreds of prosperous human settlements, even whole cities.
As dramatic
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Epic of GilgameshBy John Harris

  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6

4.6

60 ratings


More shows like Epic of Gilgamesh

View all
In Our Time by BBC Radio 4

In Our Time

5,433 Listeners

StarTalk Radio by Neil deGrasse Tyson

StarTalk Radio

14,027 Listeners

The Joe Rogan Experience by Joe Rogan

The Joe Rogan Experience

223,654 Listeners

Lore by Aaron Mahnke

Lore

44,859 Listeners

The History of Literature by Jacke Wilson / The Podglomerate

The History of Literature

1,082 Listeners

The Run-Up by The New York Times

The Run-Up

2,069 Listeners

The Daily by The New York Times

The Daily

111,102 Listeners

Interesting Times with Ross Douthat by New York Times Opinion

Interesting Times with Ross Douthat

6,710 Listeners

Mythology by Spotify Studios

Mythology

5,144 Listeners

Post Reports by The Washington Post

Post Reports

5,441 Listeners

Fall of Civilizations Podcast by Fall of Civilizations Podcast

Fall of Civilizations Podcast

4,693 Listeners

Throughline by NPR

Throughline

15,931 Listeners

The Ancients by History Hit

The Ancients

2,880 Listeners

Unexplainable by Vox

Unexplainable

2,160 Listeners

The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart by Comedy Central

The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart

10,250 Listeners